The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (190721).Vol. 15. Colonial and Revolutionary Literature; Early National Literature, Part I.

IX. Emerson.

Bibliography.

George Willis Cooke's Bibliography of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Boston, 1908, is an exhaustive record of Emerson's published writings and of biographical and critical material. The present bibliography is necessarily selective, but it is believed that it includes in particular all the publications of importance which have appeared since Mr. Cooke's volume.

Unless otherwise noted, all the single essays and poems listed below appear in the Complete Works, 19034. Those marked * have been reprinted in Uncollected Writings, New York, [1912]. Those marked ** have not been republished, unless specially noted. A large proportion of the newspaper items listed are unauthorized reports of lectures and addresses.

The language of the translations recorded is indicated in each instance by the place of publication.

[Emancipation in the British West Indies.] An Address delivered in the CourtHouse in Concord, Massachusetts, on 1st August, 1844, on the Anniversary of the Emancipation of the Negroes in the British West Indies &hellip Boston, 1844.

The Gulistan or Rose Garden, by MusleHudden Sheik Saadi, of Shiraz. Translated by Francis Gladwin, with an essay &hellip by James Ross, and a preface by R. W. Emerson. Boston, 1865. (Preface, iiixv).

MayDay and Other Pieces. Boston, 1867. London, 1867.

Address at the Dedication of the Soldiers' Monument in Concord. Ceremonies at the Dedication &hellip Concord, 1867, 2952.

[Remarks at Organization of the Free Religious Association]. Report of a Meeting to consider Free Religion. Boston, 1867. 524.

[Speech in Honor of the Chinese Embassy]. Reception of the Chinese Embassy, Boston, 1868, 525.

Natural History of Intellect and other Papers. With a General Index to Emerson's Collected Works. Boston, 1893. (Volume XII of the Riverside Edition.)

**Two Unpublished Essays. The Character of Socrates. The Present State of Ethical Philosophy . With an introduction by Edward Everett Hale. Boston, 1896. Ralph Waldo Emerson. By Edward Everett Hale. Together with Two Early Essays of Emerson. Boston, 1899.

A Correspondence between John Sterling and Ralph Waldo Emerson. With a Sketch of Sterling's Life by Edward Waldo Emerson &hellip Boston, 1897.

**Oration [before the New England Society in the City of New York], 1870. The New England Society Orations &hellip 18201885, collected and edited by Cephas Brainerd and Eveline Warner Brainerd &hellip 2 v., 1901, 2, 37196. (An incomplete and incorrect report of this address appeared in the New York Tribune of December 24, 1870.)

Correspondence between Ralph Waldo Emerson and Herman Grimm. Edited by Frederick William Holls. Boston, 1903. (Reprinted from the Atlantic Monthly, 91, 467479, 1903, with the addition of the original German letters.)

**Sermon on the Death of George Adams Sampson, 1834. Boston, 1903. (Privately printed; 30 copies.)

(The essay, Nature, in this volume, is not, as the Introduction states, an individual essay, distinct from all others of the same title, but simply a reprint, published by Emerson in The Boston Book, 1850, of the first four paragraphs of Nature in Essays, Second Series, with a very trifling verbal change in the third paragraph.)

Emerson also contributed prefaces or introductions to the following volumes:

Carlyle, Sartor Resartus, Boston, 1836, iiiv.

 Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, Boston, 1838, I., iii.

 Past and Present, Boston, 1843, iii.

Thoreau, Excursions, Boston, 1863: Biographical Sketch, 733 (This article is the same as that in Altantic Monthly, 10, 23949).

 Letters to Various Persons, Boston, 1865, iii.

Channing, The Wanderer, a colloquial poem, Boston, 1879, I, iiii.

The Hundred Greatest Men, 4 v., London, 1879, I, iiii.

G. W. Cooke's Bibliography of Emerson, pp. 324, contains a large number of personal and occasional letters which have not been republished. The following volumes, which have appeared since the publication of Mr. Cooke's Bibliography, contain additional letters by Emerson.

Contributions to The Dial, a Magazine for Literature, Philosophy, and Religion, 4 v., Boston, July, 1840April, 1844 (v. 3 and 4 edited by Emerson): [A number of the following entries are of questionable accuracy.